dyld: Library not loaded: #rpath/MyDSK.framework/MyDSK -> SWIFT iOS 8.0 - ios

I'm currently develop an swift SDK.
When compile the sample with the swift SDK, I got an error
dyld: Library not loaded: #rpath/MyDSK.framework/ODBlockChainWallet
Referenced from: /Users/{}/Sample.app/Sample
Reason: image not found
And if I go on the referenced folder, I can see the swift SDK T_T
Any idea?

I was having this problem and was able to fix it by adding the Swift framework (MySDK.framework) to the "Embedded Binaries" section of the "General" tab of the Xcode project settings. Then deleting the derived data and rebuilding.

Maybe you forgot to add the Copy Files Build Phase in your projects targets with "Framework" as destination

LOP_Luke's solution only half did it for me. After I added my embedded frameworks to the "Embedded Binaries" in the General tab, I had to go to "Build Settings" and check "Embedded Content Contains Swift Code" to YES.
By default it is set to NO.
Followed by cleaning and building. Enjoy!

The following has worked for me:
"Embedded Content Contains Swift Code" to YES
Clean
Rebuild
(I suspect, although I cannot prove, that it's really the Clean that fixes this.)

Related

Unable to run my app on iOS 13. For a framework problem

I'm trying to test my project on my iPhone with iOS 13, using Xcode 12 beta 6.
The app crash on start and this is the message in the log:
dyld: launch, loading dependent libraries
DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib/system/introspection
DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES=/Developer/usr/lib/libBacktraceRecording.dylib:/Developer/usr/lib/libMainThreadChecker.dylib:/Developer/Library/PrivateFrameworks/GPUTools.framework/libglInterpose.dylib:/usr/lib/libMTLCapture.dylib:/Developer/Library/PrivateFrameworks/DTDDISupport.framework/libViewDebuggerSupport.dylib
(lldb)
Someone can help me?
Thank you
This occurs because Xcode fails to sign the frameworks that are provided by SwiftPM with your app’s signing identity. It’s a known issue (SR-13343) in Xcode 12.
You can do these steps on third framework file to try fix :
select:Siging & Capabilites.
find : FrameWorks, Libraries, and Embedded Content.
change : the. "embed" of the third frameworks from "Do not Embed" to "Embed & Sign".
Go to Project Settings -> Target -> General -> Frameworks, Libraries, and Embedded Content -> Check that your custom framework has "Embed & Sign" option
add AppTrackingTransparency.framework to your project
In my case, I made a SPM framework and embedded then occurred this error.
I unchecked "Copy only when installing" in Build Phase of Embed Frameworks then works fine
you can also check this
Stripe iOS SDK via Swift Package Manager is installing, but crashing because "Library not loaded"
Don't Copy the Framework directly to your project. Adding 'Embed Pods Frameworks' manually works for me. Try It.
If you are asking permission for tracking via AppTrackingTransparency, you must addNSUserTrackingUsageDescription key to the info plist.

dyld: Library not loaded: #rpath .. reason: image not found

I am running into the above mentioned error on Xcode 10.2.1 and iOS 11 when adding my custom framework to an existing project.
I tried all the options mentioned in the previous questions asked related to this same error.
Always Embed Swift Binaries is set to yes, cleaned, removed derive data, reinstalled the certs.
Would anyone be able to help with this?
You need to also add your framework as Embedded Binary. Go to your target, select "General" tab and "Embedded Binaries" there.
Most of the times, you are using Apple (iOS) provided frameworks, that come as part of iOS and there is no need to do anything else, but define you're using them. That's the "Linked Framework and Libraries" part. When you use your own framework however, you need to embed it as part of your application and also add it to "Embed Binaries".

Error while compiling the project with an Xcode 9.3

I have a problem when I try to compile my project on real device. It says build succeeded and then I get the error below.
dyld: Library not loaded: #rpath/Agrume.framework/Agrume Referenced
from:
/var/containers/Bundle/Application/E3ABC8B5-A3C0-4FE3-B395-6A171C9E0EF6/myapp.app/myapp
Reason: image not found (lldb)
I tried to add the framework in the settings Build Phases/Build settings but it doesn't work.
You are probably not embedding the framework in your application.
Look at the General settings for your application target. There should be a section called "embedded binaries". Add your linked framework to that, and it should be OK. Here's an example:
I had the same issue and it was only fixed by rebuilding the used framework with newer swift version (4.0.3 -> 4.1). I had to download the library source and make a build myself.

dyld: Library not loaded: #rpath/libswiftCore.dylib / Image not found

I am running my app from xcode to my iOS device and I get this and black screen on iOS device.
Console text:
dyld: Library not loaded: #rpath/libswiftCore.dylib
Referenced from: /private/var/mobile/Containers/Bundle/Application/10DB2FE8-EF09-4857-B4AC-0DB2E4419D6F/App-Name.app/App-Name
Reason: image not found
(lldb)
Try adding the following line to Runpath Search Paths of your target.
#executable_path/Frameworks
your_target -> Build Settings -> Linking -> Runpath Search Paths
I had this same issue. I ended up adding the framework in the following locations:
General > Embedded Binaries
General > Linked Frameworks and Libraries
Build Phases > Link Binaries with Libraries
The embedded binaries seemed to be the key for me.
For me helps adding #executable_path/Frameworks to the project Runpath Search Paths, not target.
your_project -> Build Settings -> Linking -> Runpath Search Paths
None of the other solutions helped me, but everything was fixed by deleting Xcode's Derived Data directory.
Oh yes. I've faced with that problem spending hours on solution.
You may try to set "Always Embed Swift Standard Libraries" to "Yes" under your Build Settings > Build Options
(don't forget to shift+cmd+K your project after)
I had to switch 'Embedded Content Contains Swift Code' to 'Yes' to get my Obj-C app to work after updating the Obj-C embedded framework with a Swift object.
In the Framework Target (not the app target), go to Build Settings > Build Options > Always Embed Standard Swift Libraries to YES.
This solved the issue for me!
I had this error in a command line project (Xcode 10.2 and macOS 10.14.3)
The solution was to update to macOS 10.14.4
Swift command line projects won’t run on macOS 10.14.3 and earlier unless you install the Swift 5 Runtime Support for Command Line Tools package. Without that package, Swift command line projects crash on launch with “dyld: Library not loaded” errors. (46824656)
From Swift 5 Release Notes for Xcode 10.2
In my case, This issue is coming in Objective-c project in which I am using a Swift framework (AirWatch SDK).
Solutions:
I have resolved this issue with Xcode 9.3 and 11.0.1 iOS as mentioned bellow steps :
Drag and drop your swift framework in your project and move in default Framework folder of your project.
Then add them as Embedded binaries as shown in screenshot.
Change your framework status from Required to Optional as shown in screenshot. (Build Phases > Link Binary with Library)
Set Always Embed Swift Standard Libraries to Yes in your build settings.
Set Subpath and select destination as Framework for your added framework in Build Phases> Embed frameworks
as shown in screenshot.
Hope it will help someone.
I have faced the same issue, setting the right code sign identity solved the problem(Build settings->Code Signing Identity).
As per Apple technical questions "All Enterprise and standard iOS developer certificates that are created after iOS 8 was released have the new Team ID field in the proper place to allow Swift language apps to run"
I fixed by deleting all from Xcode Derived Data directory:
~/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData
Good luck all!
This error message can also occur when using a framework build in a different Swift version then the one currently being used, e.g. if you upgrade Xcode.
I had the same error message, that is how I solved it :
The issue came from the certificates generated automatically by Xcode. I had to revoke these certificates dans generate them back from developer.apple.com
The solution is then :
- Go to developer.apple.com / certificates --> Revoke certificates
OR go in Xcode > preferences > accounts > View details > select Sigining identities > clic setting whell > revoke
- Got to developper.apple.com and follow instructions to generate new certificates
- In Xcode in my project : go to Code Signing Identity and sign both Debug lines with the generated certificate
- Both release lines are set to "iOS Developer"
- Then project > clean
- Build and run on device
#Saikiran's answered worked.
My certificates were generated before iOS 8 was released. I revoked all my certificates and regenerated all provisioning profiles and it solved my problems immediately.
I don't have enough reputation to vote up #Saikiran's answer, but that definitely helped solving the problem.
For me has worked set the option
ALWAYS_EMBED_SWIFT_STANDARD_LIBRARIES
to YES in Project -> Build Settings -> Build Options
(Namirial framework through Cocoapods)
None of the above solutions worked for me. I changed the iPhone Developer Certificate trust settings in Keychain. It should be Always Trust. Change it to Use System Defaults. Double click the certificate in Keychain to open the option screen
Discovered that from this blog
I had the same error message, this is how I solved it :
This is happening because i changed bundle identifier, so i just put old bundle id and it started to work again
I already had the Runpath Search Paths set correctly, but it still didn't work. #Justin Domnitz's answer put me on the right track: Setting "Always Embed Swift Standard Libraries" to Yes in my target's build settings did the trick for me.
Seems this issue was caused by the inclusion of Swift file into objective-c custom framework. Also unsure if related but my app target was built in objective-c as well. Also building to simulator in debug. Haven't verified for release or archive build yet.
Additionally Runpath Search Settings for the project target were set to "#executable_path/Frameworks", within the target settings for the framework they were set to: "#executable_path/Frameworks" and "#loader_path/Frameworks".
After having tried rebuilding custom framework and reattaching to app target, clearing derived data folder and a couple other suggestions, what ultimately worked for me was changing the build setting within Project target for the custom framework project (not app target): "Always Embed Swift Standard Libraries" to "YES". It appeared not to matter what the setting for the app target was set to. I verified this by resetting the simulator and rebuilding. This is similar to Daniele Ceglia's answer but I wasn't able to add a comment and wanted to provide more clarity.
For me Cleaning the project solve the issue!
I got such issue, too
All other ways could not help me,
so I have done it on stupid way
created new project and pod install from scratch
and after confirmed it is working correctly, I copied all class files and storyboard files, at last done!
I think it is the last way for it, maybe could help you
I had a similar problem in an Objective-C project where I started to include Swift files.
In my case, I created two targets in the main project, and I added a Swift empty file, that creates a bridging header file and some configurations, but I only marked it as a member of one target. The first target works properly, but the second not, and I noticed that the differences in build settings were this setting:
Runpath Search Paths -> $(inherited) and #executable_path/Frameworks
And I also needed to reference Objective-C Bridging Header to the file that was created before:
Objective-C Bridging Header -> pathTo/Target-Bridging-Header.h
After adding this two settings, the second target started to work properly.
Try cleaning the build folder, I was having the same problem and I solved it this way:
Product -> Clean Build Folder
For Me restart simulator solved this problem.
I tried a bunch of the cases above and it didn't seem to solve my issue. I use git and cocoapods for a project, and the error went away as soon as I made a new commit.
I had this problem before in iPod touch iOS 9.3. And I used all the methods mentioned in this post, but none of them worked.
I checked my project setting. And in the other link flag, I found I added -Wl,-sectcreate,__RESTRICT,__restrict,/dev/null.
This flag prevents dyld insert in the jailbroken phone. When I delete this flag, the app can be launched again. I am not sure why it worked. Because in iPhone se iOS 10 I don't have to delete this line. But it did work in iPod touch iOS 9.3. So check it if you have the same situation like me.
Please check the *.framework If there is a _CodeSignature signature framework directory.
If there is no _CodeSignature folder,
Navigate to the Build Phases ,click + to add New Copy File Phase to create Copy Files.
after that, reference *.framework and choose Code Sign On Copy

ios - moving frameworks broke the project

I recently added the Social.framework and Accounts.framework to my ios project. It was placed on top of the navigator area and I dragged those two into the frameworks folder. Then it showed in red color in the Build Phases "Link Binary with Libraries" ....and now the project crashes on startup.
What did I do so wrong? And what is the correct way to fix this?
I get this error:
dyld: Library not loaded: /System/Library/Frameworks/Social.framework/Social
Referenced from: /Users/owner12/Library/Application Support/iPhone Simulator/5.1/Applications/823A0485-7443-4206-B9F5-A84C03DBFB89/BusinessPlan.app/BusinessPlan
Reason: image not found
You didn't do anything wrong. Sometimes Xcode gets confused. I would suggest that you edit the project, scroll down to where it lists the frameworks, and select the Social and Accounts frameworks and click the Minus button.
After that, you might want to quit Xcode and clean out the build folder as described here:
How to Empty Caches and Clean All Targets Xcode 4
If that doesn't solve it, you might have to revert to an earlier commit.

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